whirlcool
Well-known member
This afternoon we came home to find out that our hot water tank is no longer producing hot water. I was warm for awhile, but then the water just got cold. And we had a load of dishes to wash in the dishwasher.
So I remember that our Maytag 300 DW has a heating assist on it. I thought, could we use it with cold water input? The water going in was 57F. So I decided to turn it on.
It did the prewash in cold water. Then if drained and refilled with more cold water. Then it started to make washing noises for about a minute and stopped. The "Water Heating" light was on. It stayed on for about 20 minutes and then started running again. I opened the door and what do you know, steam! I should have taken the temp of the water. When I closed it again the machine stopped and the water heating light came on again for 10 minutes. Then it continued the rest of the cycle. For each fill afterwards it stopped and heated the water. The entire "normal wash" cycle took about four hours, normally it's about two hours or so.
But we had clean dishes in the end!
I checked out the hot water tank. No leaks or strange noises out of it. It's a Bradford/White heater about 10 years old or so, gas model. It just won't fire up when the thermostat calls for hot water. I'm going to wait until Monday to get someone out. A few places I called wanted some extra $$$ for weekend service.
I just hope we don't need a new tank.
So I remember that our Maytag 300 DW has a heating assist on it. I thought, could we use it with cold water input? The water going in was 57F. So I decided to turn it on.
It did the prewash in cold water. Then if drained and refilled with more cold water. Then it started to make washing noises for about a minute and stopped. The "Water Heating" light was on. It stayed on for about 20 minutes and then started running again. I opened the door and what do you know, steam! I should have taken the temp of the water. When I closed it again the machine stopped and the water heating light came on again for 10 minutes. Then it continued the rest of the cycle. For each fill afterwards it stopped and heated the water. The entire "normal wash" cycle took about four hours, normally it's about two hours or so.
But we had clean dishes in the end!
I checked out the hot water tank. No leaks or strange noises out of it. It's a Bradford/White heater about 10 years old or so, gas model. It just won't fire up when the thermostat calls for hot water. I'm going to wait until Monday to get someone out. A few places I called wanted some extra $$$ for weekend service.
I just hope we don't need a new tank.